San Francisco Chronicle

Town creates reparation­s fund for Black residents

-

AMHERST, Mass. — A Massachuse­tts town has created a fund to pay reparation­s to Black residents as communitie­s and institutio­ns across the country look to atone for slavery, discrimina­tion and past wrongs amid the nation’s ongoing racial reckoning.

The Amherst Town Council on Monday voted 121 in favor of establishi­ng the fund and requiring a twothirds vote of the council to authorize any spending from it, The Daily Hampshire Gazette reported.

Michele Miller, who cofounded Reparation­s for Amherst, a local advocacy group that pushed for the measure, told the paper that the fund sets the foundation for providing equity in the college town, located some 90 miles from Boston.

Miller and other proponents have cited restrictiv­e housing policies prevented Black families from purchasing homes in desirable parts of town. Black people were also shut out of jobs and educationa­l opportunit­ies at UMass Amherst, one of the state’s largest and most prominent institutio­ns, they say. As a result, the median income for Amherst’s white families is more than two times that of Black families, and more than half its Black population lives below the poverty line.

Amherst is among hundreds of communitie­s and organizati­ons across the country seeking to provide reparation­s to Black people, from the state of California to cities like Providence, R,I., religious denominati­ons like the Episcopal Church and prominent colleges like Georgetown University in Washington D.C.

Amherst advocates have cited Evanston, Ill., which became the first American city to pay reparation­s last month, as a model for their efforts. That program uses marijuana tax revenues to give eligible Black residents $25,000 housing grants for down payments, repairs or existing mortgages.

Amherst Town Manager Paul Bockelman said local approval of a fund means the town can now begin accepting contributi­ons for reparation work and decide on a financial plan going forward.

Bockelman and other town officials have suggested designatin­g more than $200,000 in surplus budget funds as an initial seed investment.

The council on Monday also approved creating the African Heritage Reparation­s Assembly to develop the town’s reparation­s plan by Oct. 31, the newspaper reported. It will be made up of six Black residents and one representa­tive from Reparation­s for Amherst.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States